Discourse

First Name: 
Eric Berson
Professional Title: 
Post-Doc Researcher
Organization/Institution: 
First Name: 
William Fisher
LinkedIn URL: 
http://www.linkedin.com/in/livingcapitalmetrics
Professional Title: 
Research Associate
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
Prior to joining the BEAR Center at UC Berkeley, Dr. Fisher was Chief Science Officer with Avatar International in Orlando, Florida, a Senior Scientist with MetaMetrics, Inc. in Durham, North Carolina, and Professor of Research in the LSU School of Medicine in New Orleans, Louisiana. He has Ph.D. and M.A. degrees from the University of Chicago, where he was a Spencer Foundation Dissertation Research Fellow. With over 25 years' experience, Fisher's current research interests range from philosophical and historical issues in science and measurement to special education under IDEA to the practical implementation of learning progressions in math and science education.
First Name: 
Savitha Moorthy
Professional Title: 
Education Researcher
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
I am an education researcher at SRI’s Center for Technology in Learning. My professional interests include language and literacy, science education (primarily the practices of explanation and argumentation), technology in education, and formative assessment. I presently contribute to a range of research and evaluation projects at CTL, including the Joint Engagement with Media project that is part of the Learning in Informal and Formal Environments (LIFE) Center, the Contingent Pedagogies project, and the Evaluation of Project-Based Inquiry Science.
First Name: 
Jeremy Price
LinkedIn URL: 
http://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfprice
Professional Title: 
Doctoral Candidate
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
Jeremy Price is graduate research assistant on the Constructing and Critiquing Arguments in Middle School Science Classrooms project. He is researching factors that impact the teaching of scientific argumentation in order to better support teacher learning with multimedia scaffolding. Previously, he has worked on a NSF IMD grant at Boston College focused on developing and researching a yearlong high school capstone course in urban ecology, as Learning and Media Specialist for the Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST), and as Education Technology Specialist at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles. Jeremy is a doctoral candidate in science and technology education at the Lynch School of Boston College and writing his dissertation on how a classroom of high school students and their teacher negotiate meaning, significance, and identities around the science curriculum.
First Name: 
Su-Tuan Lulee
About Me (Bio): 
I am a doctoral student in Distance Education at Athabasca University, Canada.

How Can Tools for Teachers Foster High-leverage Classroom Discourse and Assessment Practices

Day: 
Thu

Presenters will enlist audience’s help to expand their thinking about how a suite of Web-based tools that support ambitious forms of science teaching might be adapted for use beyond current research contexts and in more innovative ways. Classroom video of tool-supporting teaching will be shown. 

Date/Time: 
8:30 am - 9:45 am
Session Type: 
Product Feedback Session

How can tools for teachers foster high-leverage classroom discourse and assessment practices?

In this session, presenters enlist the audience’s help to expand their thinking about how tools for teaching are actually functioning in classroom settings, and how they might be adapted, customized, or used in more creative ways. The first set of tools created by the University of Washington’s Teacher Learning Trajectories project, are designed to support a more rapid transition from novice to expert-like pedagogical practice than is possible under common conditions of training and support. These expert-like capabilities are characterized in part by being able to (1) facilitate evidence-based reasoning in students through rigorous forms of inquiry in which they engage in the development, testing, revision, and application of scientific models, and (2) scaffold students—through classroom discourse and tasks—to construct evidence-based causal explanations for important scientific phenomena.

The primary resources for achieving these goals are three discourse tools that help teachers orchestrate valuable forms of classroom talk with and between students. Diagnoser Tools is the second system that will be described. Diagnoser Tools is a Web-delivered diagnostic assessment resource being developed by Facet Innovations, LLC, and collaborators including Seattle Pacific University. Each Diagnostic Unit spans a specific content sub-domain and comprises Learning Goals, Facet Cluster, Developmental Lesson, Diagnoser Question Sets, and Prescriptive Activities. The Learning Goals are aligned with national standards documents at the secondary level. The Facet Cluster describes the most prevalent student ideas (facets). Elicitation Questions bring to the fore many facets of student thinking, both productive and unproductive. Developmental Lessons are sets of activities that lead learners toward achieving the learning goals. Question Sets include multiple representations of a concept and are punctuated with distracters, each of which is mapped to a facet. The tools index specific facets to specific students. Prescriptive Activities for each problematic facet are activities that teachers may suggest to students with a specific diagnosed problematic facet. 

Presenters from each of the two projects will briefly describe the tool(s), the theory of action behind their design and use, and how research participants have taken up practices the tools intend to foster. Presenters then will each pose two of the most challenging issues they face with either the tools themselves or the tools-in-practice.  Presenters will distribute samples of the tools to audience members. After a few minutes, an interactive session will be held with posters around the room and video stations where more small-group interactions can occur. Here, presenters will seek comments, insights, and questions that challenge their thinking. With about 30 minutes left in the session, they will reconvene and allow audience members themselves to create a list of questions, ideas, and comments about the tools. They will conclude the session with group discussion about how they can collectively develop a theory of tool use for teachers to engage in more ambitious teaching.

First Name: 
Nancy Vye
Professional Title: 
Principal Research Scientist
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
Nancy Vye, Ph.D is Principal Research Scientist in the College of Education at the University of Washington. Previously, she was Co-Director of the Learning Technology Center at Vanderbilt University. Her research focuses on challenge-based learning and formative assessment in classroom settings. She is particularly interested in uses of technology for designing curricula and assessment tools that enhance teaching and learning. Vye's R & D work includes The Arts for Learning Lessons Project, an arts-integrated literacy curriculum for elementary students; The Adventures of Jasper Woodbury, a mathematics problem solving series, Schools for Thought, a technology-based, educational reform initiative; Betty's Brain, a pedagogical computer agent that teaches qualitative reasoning, and most recently, STARLegacy software that supports problem-based learning.
First Name: 
Elham Kazemi
Professional Title: 
Assoc. Professor of Curriculum and Instruction
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
Elham Kazemi is an associate professor of mathematics education at the University of Washington. Her work fits within a growing body of research that explores the long-term supports that enable teachers and schools to meet the complex demands of teaching mathematics for understanding. She has extensive experience designing and studying professional development experiences for teachers in which they learn about and design instructional practices that build student reasoning in mathematics. Two central themes run through her research: (1) examining tools for professional education and teacher learning, and (2) investigating student learning and classroom practice. Currently she is collaborating on two projects. The first (RMLL: Researching Mathematics Leader Learning) aims to study the knowledge and skills that professional educators need when leading mathematical tasks in professional development. The second (LTP: Learning in, from, and through Practice) involves supporting ambitious pedagogy by redesigning mathematics teacher education to focus on the use of routine instructional activities and coached rehearsals.
First Name: 
Camillia Matuk
LinkedIn URL: 
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/camillia-matuk/a/906/917
Professional Title: 
Postdoctoral Scholar
Organization/Institution: 
First Name: 
Michelle Cirillo
Professional Title: 
Assistant Professor
Organization/Institution: 
About Me (Bio): 
I am an assistant professor at the University of Delaware. My research interests include classroom discourse, proof, and teachers' use of curriculum materials. I am particularly interested in the space where these three areas intersect. I am a PI on the Mathematics Discourse in Secondary Classrooms grant with Beth Herbel-Eisenmann and Michael Steele from Michigan State.
Discourse
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